Ethiopian Black Seed Oil, Purely Nutrient Ethiopian BlackSeed Oil Capsules with Thymoquinone, Organic Cold-Pressed, 60 Softgels Review

4.4 (116) Amazon rating$24.99200+ bought last month

Our verdict

A straightforward, organic cold-pressed black seed oil softgel that leans on its Ethiopian sourcing and thymoquinone content, sold in a standard 60-count bottle.

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Best for

Buyers who want a simple, single-ingredient black seed oil softgel and are drawn to Ethiopian-sourced Nigella sativa.

Skip if

You want a product with additional disclosed specs like serving size or capsule count clearly listed, or you prefer liquid oil over softgels.

Pros

  • Organic cold-pressed processing
  • Formulated to contain thymoquinone
  • 60-count bottle sized for roughly a month of use
  • Solid 4.4 average rating with a meaningful review base

Cons

  • Listing provides limited detail on flavor or exact serving size
  • Softgel form only, no liquid option
  • Rating is slightly lower than some other options in this category

Our scorecard

4.3/5 overall
  • Owner rating4.4/5

    4.4 average across 116 owner ratings

  • Popularity0.7/5

    116 owner reviews, fewer than most models here

The overall score is owner satisfaction weighted by how many reviews back it, so a high rating from few reviews counts for less. The bars below show where this model stands against the other home health monitors: bathroom scales, blood pressure monitors, pregnancy and ovulation tests, thermometers, body composition monitors, stethoscopes, glucose monitors and pulse oximeters we track in this category on price, popularity and size. Context, not marks against it, and our read of the data, not a lab test.

Overview

This product markets itself as Ethiopian Black Seed Oil, made with organic cold-pressed processing and formulated to contain thymoquinone, the naturally occurring compound found in black cumin seed. It comes in a 60-softgel bottle, a common size for this category that works out to roughly a month's supply at two capsules a day.

Sourcing is the main differentiator the brand leans on here, positioning the oil as coming from Ethiopian-grown Nigella sativa. Beyond that, the listing does not provide much additional detail on serving size or specific stated benefits, so shoppers should look at the product images and description for any further specifics before buying.

Priced at $24.99, it sits in the typical range for a 60-count black seed oil softgel. It has built up a moderate review base of 116 ratings at a 4.4 average, with about 200 units bought in the past month.

Performance notes

As a softgel product, this is built for a simple swallow-and-go routine rather than measuring liquid oil. The listing centers its organic cold-pressed processing and thymoquinone content as the main selling points, with Ethiopian sourcing as the brand's key differentiator.

What buyers say

With 116 reviews averaging 4.4 stars and about 200 units bought in the past month, this product has a reasonably established track record, with a rating a bit below the top performers in this category but still solidly positive.

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Frequently asked questions

How many softgels come in one bottle?

The bottle contains 60 softgels.

Is this oil sourced from Ethiopia?

Yes, the brand markets it as Ethiopian black seed oil, referring to the origin of the Nigella sativa used.

Does the listing specify a serving size?

The available specs do not list a detailed serving size, so it is worth checking the product label or images for that information before purchase.

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